Members-only podcast episode
Bink Hallum on Zosimus Arabicus: The Final Quittance
This is a special podcast episode for SHWEP members only
Already a member? Log in here to view this episode
Bink Hallum has written the book on the Arabic Zosimus, and in this special episode, for the hardcore lovers of the history of alchemy, we go through the textual corpus of Zosimus in Arabic in a detailed way, discussing what’s there, how much definitely goes back to original Greek alchemical texts by Zosimus, how much probably does, and how much definitely doesn’t. This detailed survey of the whole Arabic Zosimus corpus – authentic, probably authentic, and definitely not authentic – all of which is fascinating stuff, and can be summarised as follows:
• Epistles: The Seven Epistles or Book of Images (Kitāb al-ṣuwar), a few known as the Private Epistles (al-Rasāʾil al-khāṣṣah) and a few other epistles scattered here and there in the evidence,
• The Keys of the Art ( Kitāb mafātīḥ al-ṣanʿah), a collection of ten epistles to Theosebia, probably a commentary on the Pseudo-Democritus’ work The Ten Keys,
• A book provisionally called The Sulfurs, divided into six books of technical alchemy,
• The Muṣḥaf al-ṣanʿah or Tome of the Work, a dialogue between Zos and Theosebia on the art,
• The much longer dialogue between the two contained in the Muṣḥaf al-ṣuwar or Tome of Images, a richly-illustrated work which is our earliest-known alchemical emblem-book,
• And the Risalah fi-Bayān Tafrīq al-Adyān, the Treatise on the Explanation of the Divisions of the Religions, a work definitely not by Zosimus, but attributed to one ‘Zosimus the Hebrew’, but which is absolutely fascinating.
We discuss the procedures Bink has developed for trying to judge the authenticity or otherwise of a given text in the thickets of Zosimean Arabic works, once you have exhausted the few Greek-Arabic parallel texts which survive (a couple of epistles).
We then dive into the Tome of Images in a detailed discussion. What do the illustrations of this, our first illustrated alchemical emblem-sequence, tell us? What are we to make of the messed-up text accompanying the illustrations: intentional esoteric misdirection or just a tangled textual transmission?
Interview Bio:
Dr Bink Hallum is Arabic Scientific Manuscripts Curator at the British Library, and is currently doing Wellcome-Trust-funded postdoctoral research at the University of Warwick on the alchemical Twelve Books of Abū Bakr al-Rāzī. His research centres on Islamicate codicology, Græco-Arabic studies, the history of the sciences, and loads of other interesting stuff.
Works Cited in this Episode:
Theodor Abt. The Book of Pictures. Mushaf as-suwar by Zosimus of Panopolis. Facsimile with an Introduction. Number II.i in Corpus Alchemicum Arabicum. Living Human Heritage Publications, Zurich, 2007.
Marcelin Berthelot and C.E. Ruelle, editors. Collection des Anciens Alchimistes Grecs, texte et traduction. G. Steinheil, Paris, 1887-8.
Bink Hallum. Zosimus Arabus. The Reception of Zosimos of Panopolis in the Arabic/Islamic World. PhD thesis, Warburg Institute, University of London, 2008.
For Recommended Reading, see the previous episode, as well as:
Hallum, Bink and Marcel Marée, ‘A Medieval Alchemical Book Reveals New Secrets’, The British Museum Blog (posted 5 February 2016).
Daniel Burnham
March 10, 2023
Images from bottom to top:
Zosimos (solar, right side) has a chain attached to ‘the bodies’. To understand what is meant by this one must review the 25th epistle and the related Greek. Bodies are stable in the fire. The goal of the work is to make the bodies into not bodies. Theosebia has attached/chained to the bodies as well, and underneath you see her volatile aspect (winged beings). She kills Zosimos, thus allowing Zosimos to be integrated i.e. the bodies become not bodies.
2nd Image:
Theosebia now has taken charge of the chained bodies and brought forth the stage of dissolution. Above we see Zosimos carried by the bodies, but now he has partaken of the volatile/feminine aspect shown by the fumes coming from his dead body.
Top image:
The three stages of the work: black, white, and red. The foliage at the bottom of the tree is evocative of fire, which the man on the left is pointing to. It’s possible there is a numerological connection with the image (leaves of the tree) though it is difficult to say.